1<!--===- docs/Extensions.md 2 3 Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions. 4 See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information. 5 SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception 6 7--> 8 9# Fortran Extensions supported by Flang 10 11```eval_rst 12.. contents:: 13 :local: 14``` 15 16As a general principle, this compiler will accept by default and 17without complaint many legacy features, extensions to the standard 18language, and features that have been deleted from the standard, 19so long as the recognition of those features would not cause a 20standard-conforming program to be rejected or misinterpreted. 21 22Other non-standard features, which do conflict with the current 23standard specification of the Fortran programming language, are 24accepted if enabled by command-line options. 25 26## Intentional violations of the standard 27 28* Scalar `INTEGER` actual argument expressions (not variables!) 29 are converted to the kinds of scalar `INTEGER` dummy arguments 30 when the interface is explicit and the kinds differ. 31 This conversion allows the results of the intrinsics like 32 `SIZE` that (as mentioned below) may return non-default 33 `INTEGER` results by default to be passed. A warning is 34 emitted when truncation is possible. These conversions 35 are not applied in calls to non-intrinsic generic procedures. 36* We are not strict on the contents of `BLOCK DATA` subprograms 37 so long as they contain no executable code, no internal subprograms, 38 and allocate no storage outside a named `COMMON` block. (C1415) 39* Delimited list-directed (and NAMELIST) character output is required 40 to emit contiguous doubled instances of the delimiter character 41 when it appears in the output value. When fixed-size records 42 are being emitted, as is the case with internal output, this 43 is not possible when the problematic character falls on the last 44 position of a record. No two other Fortran compilers do the same 45 thing in this situation so there is no good precedent to follow. 46 Because it seems least wrong, we emit one copy of the delimiter as 47 the last character of the current record and another as the first 48 character of the next record. (The second-least-wrong alternative 49 might be to flag a runtime error, but that seems harsh since it's 50 not an explicit error in the standard, and the output may not have 51 to be usable later as input anyway.) 52 Consequently, the output is not suitable for use as list-directed or 53 NAMELIST input. If a later standard were to clarify this case, this 54 behavior will change as needed to conform. 55``` 56character(11) :: buffer(3) 57character(10) :: quotes = '""""""""""' 58write(buffer,*,delim="QUOTE") quotes 59print "('>',a10,'<')", buffer 60end 61``` 62* The name of the control variable in an implied DO loop in an array 63 constructor or DATA statement has a scope over the value-list only, 64 not the bounds of the implied DO loop. It is not advisable to use 65 an object of the same name as the index variable in a bounds 66 expression, but it will work, instead of being needlessly undefined. 67* If both the `COUNT=` and the `COUNT_MAX=` optional arguments are 68 present on the same call to the intrinsic subroutine `SYSTEM_CLOCK`, 69 we require that their types have the same integer kind, since the 70 kind of these arguments is used to select the clock rate. 71 In common with some other compilers, the clock is in milliseconds 72 for kinds <= 4 and nanoseconds otherwise where the target system 73 supports these rates. 74 75## Extensions, deletions, and legacy features supported by default 76 77* Tabs in source 78* `<>` as synonym for `.NE.` and `/=` 79* `$` and `@` as legal characters in names 80* Initialization in type declaration statements using `/values/` 81* Kind specification with `*`, e.g. `REAL*4` 82* `DOUBLE COMPLEX` 83* Signed complex literal constants 84* DEC `STRUCTURE`, `RECORD`, with '%FILL'; but `UNION`, and `MAP` 85 are not yet supported throughout compilation, and elicit a 86 "not yet implemented" message. 87* Structure field access with `.field` 88* `BYTE` as synonym for `INTEGER(KIND=1)` 89* Quad precision REAL literals with `Q` 90* `X` prefix/suffix as synonym for `Z` on hexadecimal literals 91* `B`, `O`, `Z`, and `X` accepted as suffixes as well as prefixes 92* Triplets allowed in array constructors 93* `%LOC`, `%VAL`, and `%REF` 94* Leading comma allowed before I/O item list 95* Empty parentheses allowed in `PROGRAM P()` 96* Missing parentheses allowed in `FUNCTION F` 97* Cray based `POINTER(p,x)` and `LOC()` intrinsic (with `%LOC()` as 98 an alias) 99* Arithmetic `IF`. (Which branch should NaN take? Fall through?) 100* `ASSIGN` statement, assigned `GO TO`, and assigned format 101* `PAUSE` statement 102* Hollerith literals and edit descriptors 103* `NAMELIST` allowed in the execution part 104* Omitted colons on type declaration statements with attributes 105* COMPLEX constructor expression, e.g. `(x+y,z)` 106* `+` and `-` before all primary expressions, e.g. `x*-y` 107* `.NOT. .NOT.` accepted 108* `NAME=` as synonym for `FILE=` 109* Data edit descriptors without width or other details 110* `D` lines in fixed form as comments or debug code 111* `CARRIAGECONTROL=` on the OPEN and INQUIRE statements 112* `CONVERT=` on the OPEN and INQUIRE statements 113* `DISPOSE=` on the OPEN and INQUIRE statements 114* Leading semicolons are ignored before any statement that 115 could have a label 116* The character `&` in column 1 in fixed form source is a variant form 117 of continuation line. 118* Character literals as elements of an array constructor without an explicit 119 type specifier need not have the same length; the longest literal determines 120 the length parameter of the implicit type, not the first. 121* Outside a character literal, a comment after a continuation marker (&) 122 need not begin with a comment marker (!). 123* Classic C-style /*comments*/ are skipped, so multi-language header 124 files are easier to write and use. 125* $ and \ edit descriptors are supported in FORMAT to suppress newline 126 output on user prompts. 127* Tabs in format strings (not `FORMAT` statements) are allowed on output. 128* REAL and DOUBLE PRECISION variable and bounds in DO loops 129* Integer literals without explicit kind specifiers that are out of range 130 for the default kind of INTEGER are assumed to have the least larger kind 131 that can hold them, if one exists. 132* BOZ literals can be used as INTEGER values in contexts where the type is 133 unambiguous: the right hand sides of assigments and initializations 134 of INTEGER entities, and as actual arguments to a few intrinsic functions 135 (ACHAR, BTEST, CHAR). BOZ literals are interpreted as default INTEGER 136 when they appear as the first items of array constructors with no 137 explicit type. Otherwise, they generally cannot be used if the type would 138 not be known (e.g., `IAND(X'1',X'2')`). 139* BOZ literals can also be used as REAL values in some contexts where the 140 type is unambiguous, such as initializations of REAL parameters. 141* EQUIVALENCE of numeric and character sequences (a ubiquitous extension) 142* Values for whole anonymous parent components in structure constructors 143 (e.g., `EXTENDEDTYPE(PARENTTYPE(1,2,3))` rather than `EXTENDEDTYPE(1,2,3)` 144 or `EXTENDEDTYPE(PARENTTYPE=PARENTTYPE(1,2,3))`). 145* Some intrinsic functions are specified in the standard as requiring the 146 same type and kind for their arguments (viz., ATAN with two arguments, 147 ATAN2, DIM, HYPOT, MAX, MIN, MOD, and MODULO); 148 we allow distinct types to be used, promoting 149 the arguments as if they were operands to an intrinsic `+` operator, 150 and defining the result type accordingly. 151* DOUBLE COMPLEX intrinsics DREAL, DCMPLX, DCONJG, and DIMAG. 152* The DFLOAT intrinsic function. 153* INT_PTR_KIND intrinsic returns the kind of c_intptr_t. 154* Restricted specific conversion intrinsics FLOAT, SNGL, IDINT, IFIX, DREAL, 155 and DCMPLX accept arguments of any kind instead of only the default kind or 156 double precision kind. Their result kinds remain as specified. 157* Specific intrinsics AMAX0, AMAX1, AMIN0, AMIN1, DMAX1, DMIN1, MAX0, MAX1, 158 MIN0, and MIN1 accept more argument types than specified. They are replaced by 159 the related generics followed by conversions to the specified result types. 160* When a scalar CHARACTER actual argument of the same kind is known to 161 have a length shorter than the associated dummy argument, it is extended 162 on the right with blanks, similar to assignment. 163* When a dummy argument is `POINTER` or `ALLOCATABLE` and is `INTENT(IN)`, we 164 relax enforcement of some requirements on actual arguments that must otherwise 165 hold true for definable arguments. 166* Assignment of `LOGICAL` to `INTEGER` and vice versa (but not other types) is 167 allowed. The values are normalized. 168* Static initialization of `LOGICAL` with `INTEGER` is allowed in `DATA` statements 169 and object initializers. 170 The results are *not* normalized to canonical `.TRUE.`/`.FALSE.`. 171 Static initialization of `INTEGER` with `LOGICAL` is also permitted. 172* An effectively empty source file (no program unit) is accepted and 173 produces an empty relocatable output file. 174* A `RETURN` statement may appear in a main program. 175* DATA statement initialization is allowed for procedure pointers outside 176 structure constructors. 177* Nonstandard intrinsic functions: ISNAN, SIZEOF 178* A forward reference to a default INTEGER scalar dummy argument is 179 permitted to appear in a specification expression, such as an array 180 bound, in a scope with IMPLICIT NONE(TYPE) if the name 181 of the dummy argument would have caused it to be implicitly typed 182 as default INTEGER if IMPLICIT NONE(TYPE) were absent. 183* OPEN(ACCESS='APPEND') is interpreted as OPEN(POSITION='APPEND') 184 to ease porting from Sun Fortran. 185* Intrinsic subroutines EXIT([status]) and ABORT() 186* The definition of simple contiguity in 9.5.4 applies only to arrays; 187 we also treat scalars as being trivially contiguous, so that they 188 can be used in contexts like data targets in pointer assignments 189 with bounds remapping. 190* We support some combinations of specific procedures in generic 191 interfaces that a strict reading of the standard would preclude 192 when their calls must nonetheless be distinguishable. 193 Specifically, `ALLOCATABLE` dummy arguments are distinguishing 194 if an actual argument acceptable to one could not be passed to 195 the other & vice versa because exactly one is polymorphic or 196 exactly one is unlimited polymorphic). 197* External unit 0 is predefined and connected to the standard error output, 198 and defined as `ERROR_UNIT` in the intrinsic `ISO_FORTRAN_ENV` module. 199* Objects in blank COMMON may be initialized. 200* Multiple specifications of the SAVE attribute on the same object 201 are allowed, with a warning. 202* Specific intrinsic functions BABS, IIABS, JIABS, KIABS, ZABS, and CDABS. 203* A `POINTER` component's type need not be a sequence type when 204 the component appears in a derived type with `SEQUENCE`. 205 (This case should probably be an exception to constraint C740 in 206 the standard.) 207* Format expressions that have type but are not character and not 208 integer scalars are accepted so long as they are simply contiguous. 209 This legacy extension supports pre-Fortran'77 usage in which 210 variables initialized in DATA statements with Hollerith literals 211 as modifiable formats. 212 213### Extensions supported when enabled by options 214 215* C-style backslash escape sequences in quoted CHARACTER literals 216 (but not Hollerith) [-fbackslash] 217* Logical abbreviations `.T.`, `.F.`, `.N.`, `.A.`, `.O.`, and `.X.` 218 [-flogical-abbreviations] 219* `.XOR.` as a synonym for `.NEQV.` [-fxor-operator] 220* The default `INTEGER` type is required by the standard to occupy 221 the same amount of storage as the default `REAL` type. Default 222 `REAL` is of course 32-bit IEEE-754 floating-point today. This legacy 223 rule imposes an artificially small constraint in some cases 224 where Fortran mandates that something have the default `INTEGER` 225 type: specifically, the results of references to the intrinsic functions 226 `SIZE`, `STORAGE_SIZE`,`LBOUND`, `UBOUND`, `SHAPE`, and the location reductions 227 `FINDLOC`, `MAXLOC`, and `MINLOC` in the absence of an explicit 228 `KIND=` actual argument. We return `INTEGER(KIND=8)` by default in 229 these cases when the `-flarge-sizes` option is enabled. 230 `SIZEOF` and `C_SIZEOF` always return `INTEGER(KIND=8)`. 231* Treat each specification-part like is has `IMPLICIT NONE` 232 [-fimplicit-none-type-always] 233* Ignore occurrences of `IMPLICIT NONE` and `IMPLICIT NONE(TYPE)` 234 [-fimplicit-none-type-never] 235* Old-style `PARAMETER pi=3.14` statement without parentheses 236 [-falternative-parameter-statement] 237 238### Extensions and legacy features deliberately not supported 239 240* `.LG.` as synonym for `.NE.` 241* `REDIMENSION` 242* Allocatable `COMMON` 243* Expressions in formats 244* `ACCEPT` as synonym for `READ *` 245* `TYPE` as synonym for `PRINT` 246* `ARRAY` as synonym for `DIMENSION` 247* `VIRTUAL` as synonym for `DIMENSION` 248* `ENCODE` and `DECODE` as synonyms for internal I/O 249* `IMPLICIT AUTOMATIC`, `IMPLICIT STATIC` 250* Default exponent of zero, e.g. `3.14159E` 251* Characters in defined operators that are neither letters nor digits 252* `B` suffix on unquoted octal constants 253* `Z` prefix on unquoted hexadecimal constants (dangerous) 254* `T` and `F` as abbreviations for `.TRUE.` and `.FALSE.` in DATA (PGI/XLF) 255* Use of host FORMAT labels in internal subprograms (PGI-only feature) 256* ALLOCATE(TYPE(derived)::...) as variant of correct ALLOCATE(derived::...) (PGI only) 257* Defining an explicit interface for a subprogram within itself (PGI only) 258* USE association of a procedure interface within that same procedure's definition 259* NULL() as a structure constructor expression for an ALLOCATABLE component (PGI). 260* Conversion of LOGICAL to INTEGER in expressions. 261* IF (integer expression) THEN ... END IF (PGI/Intel) 262* Comparsion of LOGICAL with ==/.EQ. rather than .EQV. (also .NEQV.) (PGI/Intel) 263* Procedure pointers in COMMON blocks (PGI/Intel) 264* Underindexing multi-dimensional arrays (e.g., A(1) rather than A(1,1)) (PGI only) 265* Legacy PGI `NCHARACTER` type and `NC` Kanji character literals 266* Using non-integer expressions for array bounds (e.g., REAL A(3.14159)) (PGI/Intel) 267* Mixing INTEGER types as operands to bit intrinsics (e.g., IAND); only two 268 compilers support it, and they disagree on sign extension. 269* Module & program names that conflict with an object inside the unit (PGI only). 270* When the same name is brought into scope via USE association from 271 multiple modules, the name must refer to a generic interface; PGI 272 allows a name to be a procedure from one module and a generic interface 273 from another. 274* Type parameter declarations must come first in a derived type definition; 275 some compilers allow them to follow `PRIVATE`, or be intermixed with the 276 component declarations. 277* Wrong argument types in calls to specific intrinsics that have different names than the 278 related generics. Some accepted exceptions are listed above in the allowed extensions. 279 PGI, Intel, and XLF support this in ways that are not numerically equivalent. 280 PGI converts the arguments while Intel and XLF replace the specific by the related generic. 281 282## Preprocessing behavior 283 284* The preprocessor is always run, whatever the filename extension may be. 285* We respect Fortran comments in macro actual arguments (like GNU, Intel, NAG; 286 unlike PGI and XLF) on the principle that macro calls should be treated 287 like function references. Fortran's line continuation methods also work. 288 289## Standard features not silently accepted 290 291* Fortran explicitly ignores type declaration statements when they 292 attempt to type the name of a generic intrinsic function (8.2 p3). 293 One can declare `CHARACTER::COS` and still get a real result 294 from `COS(3.14159)`, for example. f18 will complain when a 295 generic intrinsic function's inferred result type does not 296 match an explicit declaration. This message is a warning. 297 298## Standard features that might as well not be 299 300* f18 supports designators with constant expressions, properly 301 constrained, as initial data targets for data pointers in 302 initializers of variable and component declarations and in 303 `DATA` statements; e.g., `REAL, POINTER :: P => T(1:10:2)`. 304 This Fortran 2008 feature might as well be viewed like an 305 extension; no other compiler that we've tested can handle 306 it yet. 307 308## Behavior in cases where the standard is ambiguous or indefinite 309 310* When an inner procedure of a subprogram uses the value or an attribute 311 of an undeclared name in a specification expression and that name does 312 not appear in the host, it is not clear in the standard whether that 313 name is an implicitly typed local variable of the inner procedure or a 314 host association with an implicitly typed local variable of the host. 315 For example: 316``` 317module module 318 contains 319 subroutine host(j) 320 ! Although "m" never appears in the specification or executable 321 ! parts of this subroutine, both of its contained subroutines 322 ! might be accessing it via host association. 323 integer, intent(in out) :: j 324 call inner1(j) 325 call inner2(j) 326 contains 327 subroutine inner1(n) 328 integer(kind(m)), intent(in) :: n 329 m = n + 1 330 end subroutine 331 subroutine inner2(n) 332 integer(kind(m)), intent(out) :: n 333 n = m + 2 334 end subroutine 335 end subroutine 336end module 337 338program demo 339 use module 340 integer :: k 341 k = 0 342 call host(k) 343 print *, k, " should be 3" 344end 345 346``` 347 348 Other Fortran compilers disagree in their interpretations of this example; 349 some seem to treat the references to `m` as if they were host associations 350 to an implicitly typed variable (and print `3`), while others seem to 351 treat them as references to implicitly typed local variabless, and 352 load uninitialized values. 353 354 In f18, we chose to emit an error message for this case since the standard 355 is unclear, the usage is not portable, and the issue can be easily resolved 356 by adding a declaration. 357 358* In subclause 7.5.6.2 of Fortran 2018 the standard defines a partial ordering 359 of the final subroutine calls for finalizable objects, their non-parent 360 components, and then their parent components. 361 (The object is finalized, then the non-parent components of each element, 362 and then the parent component.) 363 Some have argued that the standard permits an implementation 364 to finalize the parent component before finalizing an allocatable component in 365 the context of deallocation, and the next revision of the language may codify 366 this option. 367 In the interest of avoiding needless confusion, this compiler implements what 368 we believe to be the least surprising order of finalization. 369 Specifically: all non-parent components are finalized before 370 the parent, allocatable or not; 371 all finalization takes place before any deallocation; 372 and no object or subobject will be finalized more than once. 373 374* When `RECL=` is set via the `OPEN` statement for a sequential formatted input 375 file, it functions as an effective maximum record length. 376 Longer records, if any, will appear as if they had been truncated to 377 the value of `RECL=`. 378 (Other compilers ignore `RECL=`, signal an error, or apply effective truncation 379 to some forms of input in this situation.) 380 For sequential formatted output, RECL= serves as a limit on record lengths 381 that raises an error when it is exceeded. 382